No DMC Payments for October Milk

After two consecutive months of triggering Dairy Margin Coverage payments, no indemnity payments will be issued for October milk.

For the first half of the year, nearly $612 million in government payments have been issued, a vastly different picture compared to last year.
For the first half of the year, nearly $612 million in government payments have been issued, a vastly different picture compared to last year.
(Stock Photo)

After two consecutive months of triggering Dairy Margin Coverage (DMC) payments, the USDA’s Farm Service Agency just announced that October’s DMC income over feed costs calculation is $10.71/cwt. This means that no indemnity payment will be issued for October milk.

USDA announced November’s Class III price to be $21.01/cwt., down $0.80 from October. The Class IV price was $23.30/cwt., down $1.66. The Class II price was $24.67/cwt., down $1.06.

The protein price increased by $0.08/lb. to $2.5374, but the butterfat price fell $0.28/lb. to $3.3720. The other solid’s price lost $0.01/lb. to $0.2837.

Additionally, the all-milk price increased $1.50/cwt. to $25.90. Corn fell $0.59/bu. to $6.50, soybean meal increased to $468.68, and premium alfalfa came in at $348/ton.

2023 DMC Enrollment

DMC payments are triggered when the difference between the national all-milk price and the national average feed cost (the margin) falls below the producer-selected margin trigger, ranging from Tier 1 from $4.00 to $9.50, and Tier 2 from $4.00 to $8.00, calculated monthly.

FSA shares that in 2021, more than 19,000 operations enrolled in DMC and received more than $1.1 billion in payments, with an average payment of more than $62,000 paid.

National Milk Producers Federation (NMPF) President and CEO, Jim Mulhern, strongly urged producers to contact their local FSA office and sign up. The deadline to sign up is Friday, Dec. 9.

“The current combination of high prices with costs that can be even higher illustrates the basic value of DMC for producers who can benefit from the program,” Mulhern says. “By calculating assistance via a margin rather than a target price, DMC offers a measure of protection against the current cost volatility that’s challenging many milk producers.”

Farm Service Agency (FSA) Administrator Zach Ducheneaux says that DMC provides critical assistance to both small- and mid-sized dairies in the U.S. by helping them make sure they can manage the numerous and often unpredictable uncertainties that adversely impact market prices for milk.

“This year showed why enrolling in DMC makes good business sense,” he states. “Early in the year, some economists predicted that DMC would not trigger any payments for the calendar year, but then fast forward to now, when we’re starting to see payments trigger and a return on investment.”

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